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SCRUM with Team Foundation Server 2010

SCRUM with Team Foundation Server 2010. Agenda. Scrum with TFS 2010 using MSF for Agile 5.0 Planning the Project How do you plan the project? Project planning in TFS 2010 Planning a Sprint What is sprint planning? Sprint planning in TFS 2010 Running a Sprint How do you run a sprint?

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SCRUM with Team Foundation Server 2010

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  1. SCRUM with Team Foundation Server 2010

  2. Agenda • Scrum with TFS 2010 using MSF for Agile 5.0 • Planning the Project • How do you plan the project? • Project planning in TFS 2010 • Planning a Sprint • What is sprint planning? • Sprint planning in TFS 2010 • Running a Sprint • How do you run a sprint? • Running a sprint in TFS 2010

  3. How do you Plan the Project? • Product Backlog • Evolving backlog of user stories (requirements) • Describes what users need and value • Owned by the Product Owner • Prioritized by business value • Each story is written from the user’s perspective

  4. Planning the Project Product Backlog “As a new customer I want to register online so I can use the services offered” User Stories 5 8 Stories are listed on the backlog in priority order The team estimates each story using story points 5 Priority 3 New stories are added to the product backlog 8 1

  5. Planning the Project Product Backlog Stories are planned for completion in upcoming sprints User Stories Sprint 3 3 3 3 Sprint 4 The product owner re-prioritizes the backlog Priority 4 4 4

  6. Product Backlog in TFS 2010 • Product Backlog query • Creating new user stories • Prioritizing • Estimating story points • Add user stories to upcoming sprints

  7. Product Backlog Product backlog query in Team Explorer

  8. Product Backlog New stories created by the Product Owner

  9. Product Backlog The new story provides a guide to ensure the story is written from the customer’s perspective

  10. Product Backlog Each story is ranked by priority and assigned a story point value

  11. Product Backlog Product Backlog workbook for planning future sprints

  12. Product Backlog Workbook Stories that are too large are left on the backlog Each story is placed in an upcoming sprint

  13. Product Backlog Workbook The product owner can use the velocity of the team to help plan for upcoming sprints … with start/end dates and the size of the team Each sprint is added to Iteration Planning worksheet…

  14. Agenda • Scrum with TFS 2010 using MSF for Agile 5.0 • Planning the Project • How do you plan the project? • Project planning in TFS 2010 • Planning a Sprint • What is sprint planning? • Sprint planning in TFS 2010 • Running a Sprint • How do you run a sprint? • Running a sprint in TFS 2010

  15. What is Sprint Planning? • The product owner and the team add user stories to the sprint • Each story is decomposed into tasks • The team makes a commitment to each user story

  16. Planning a Sprint Product Backlog Iteration Backlog User Stories User Stories Tasks (hours) Commit! Based on estimates the team commits to each story 3 3 The team thinks this story is more work than they can commit to… During the sprint planning meeting, the product owner and the team add User Stories to the sprint 3 The team breaks down each story into tasks Commit! Can’t Commit!

  17. Planning a Sprint Product Backlog Iteration Backlog User Stories User Stories User Stories Tasks (hours) Tasks (hours) Commit! 3 3 3 The larger story is removed from the sprint and the team considers a smaller story on the backlog Commit! ? 3 The sprint is now planned and the team is ready to get started! The team can commit to this smaller story Commit!

  18. Sprint Planning • Break down user stories into tasks • Load balance • Commit • Track interruptions • Track progress

  19. Iteration Backlog Workbook Each sprint has an Excel workbook to assist the team in making a commitment

  20. Iteration Backlog Workbook Dates for the sprint are added…

  21. Iteration Backlog Workbook ... and any planned interruptions

  22. Iteration Backlog Workbook The team breaks down the first user story into tasks

  23. Iteration Backlog Workbook Each task is estimated in hours

  24. Iteration Backlog Workbook The team checks their capacity for the sprint

  25. Iteration Backlog Workbook The next story is broken down…

  26. Iteration Backlog Workbook

  27. Iteration Backlog Workbook The team has capacity… … but one team member has too much work

  28. Iteration Backlog Workbook

  29. Iteration Backlog Workbook The final story is broken down

  30. Iteration Backlog Workbook Based on capacity and estimates, the team is overcommitted

  31. Iteration Backlog Workbook The final story is removed…

  32. Iteration Backlog Workbook And replaced with a smaller story from the product backlog

  33. Iteration Backlog Workbook … but one team member still has too much work The team is comfortable committing to this story…

  34. Iteration Backlog Workbook Tasks are reassigned

  35. Iteration Backlog Workbook Tasks are reassigned

  36. Iteration Backlog Workbook Work is now load balanced across the team

  37. Iteration Backlog Workbook The final step is to publish the data back to TFS Sprint planning is complete!

  38. Agenda • Scrum with TFS 2010 using MSF for Agile 5.0 • Planning the Project • How do you plan the project? • Project planning in TFS 2010 • Planning a Sprint • What is sprint planning? • Sprint planning in TFS 2010 • Running a Sprint • How do you run a sprint? • Running a sprint in TFS 2010

  39. How do you Run a Sprint? • Track Progress • Daily Sprint Meeting • What work has been completed • What work remains • Deliver a “potentially shippable” increment • Demo the value delivered • Retrospective

  40. Running a Sprint Product Backlog Iteration Backlog User Stories User Stories Tasks (hours) The team starts work on the tasks…

  41. Running a Sprint Product Backlog Iteration Backlog User Stories User Stories Tasks (hours) Completed work is reported daily

  42. Running a Sprint Product Backlog Iteration Backlog User Stories User Stories Tasks (hours)

  43. Running a Sprint Product Backlog Iteration Backlog User Stories User Stories Tasks (hours) Each User Story has been implemented All work for the sprint is “done-done”

  44. Running a Sprint Product Backlog Iteration Backlog User Stories User Stories Tasks (hours) And the team has developed a “potentially shippable” increment The team holds a demo to show the value they have delivered

  45. Running a Sprint Product Backlog Iteration Backlog User Stories User Stories Tasks (hours) The latest increment is shipped to customers

  46. Running a Sprint Product Backlog Iteration Backlog User Stories User Stories Tasks (hours) Stories and tasks are cleared from the backlog – the team delivered on its commitment Stories delivered in the last sprint are closed What worked? What didn’t work? What can the team do to improve? The team holds a retrospective…

  47. Running a Sprint Product Backlog Iteration Backlog User Stories User Stories Tasks (hours) New Stories are added to the Product Backlog

  48. Running a Sprint Product Backlog Iteration Backlog User Stories User Stories Tasks (hours) The backlog is prioritized and ready for the team to plan the next sprint

  49. Running a Sprint • Record completed work daily • Track progress with reports and dashboards • Retrospectives

  50. Updating Tasks Multiple interfaces for updating work items

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